12 September 2000
Fact Sheet on U.S. Aid to Children Affected by War
Several different United States agencies and offices help alleviate
the suffering of children affected by war, as part of the U.S.
humanitarian assistance totaling approximately $1.7 billion per year.
The State Department September 11 issued a fact sheet enumerating how
the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the State
Department's Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM)
allocate their funds and the efforts being made, ranging from
emergency health care to providing resources for AIDS orphans, street
children and children disabled as the result of war.
Following is the text of the State Department's fact sheet:
U.S. Department of State
Office of the Spokesman
September 11, 2000
Fact Sheet: U.S. Assistance to Children Affected by War
Around the globe today, children in more than 50 countries are
suffering the effects of armed conflict. It is estimated that there
are more than 400,000 unaccompanied refugees or internally displaced
children and over 300,000 child combatants. For each child who is
killed or injured by physical violence, gunfire or land mines, many
more are deprived of their basic physical, emotional, spiritual and
cultural needs. Millions of children have lost their parents,
siblings, homes and education. Girls especially are victimized in ways
that can have a life-long impact.
The United States, as the world's leading humanitarian donor nation,
spends approximately $1.7 billion per year on humanitarian assistance.
This Fact Sheet outlines efforts on the part of several different
United States agencies and offices to help alleviate the suffering of
children affected by war.
U.S. Agency for International Development
The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) funds programs
to assist children affected by war in nine countries. These
child-based interventions are often the first developmental activities
that take place in a country that is or has recently been affected by
war or conflict. USAID programs are designed to:
- Document, trace and reunify children with families;
- Support psychosocial adjustment of children in distress;
- Facilitate reintegration of children into communities;
- Support formal and informal education opportunities;
In addition, USAID administers two funds, each with annual budgets
over $10 million, that bring significant assistance to war and
conflict-affected children.
Displaced Children and Orphans Fund: Since 1989, USAID's Displaced
Children and Orphans Fund has worked in 28 countries to provide more
than $78 million to organizations that strengthen the capacity of
families and communities to provide care, protection, and support for
orphaned children. While this fund also provides resources for AIDS
orphans, street children and disabled children, over half of its
budget assists children impacted by war.
Patrick J. Leahy War Victims fund: Since 1989, the Leahy Fund has
provided more than $60 million in financial and technical assistance
to improve the mobility, health, and social integration of children
and adult civilian victims of war. Working in more than 16 countries,
the fund serves people who suffer from mobility-related injuries,
including those with land mine injuries, and those who suffer from
polio as a result of interrupted immunization services.
U.S. Department of State
The Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM) of the U.S.
Department of State contributes millions of dollars each year to
activities for refugee children, including those directly affected by
armed conflict. These funds are contributed principally thorough the
worldwide activities of the International Committee of the Red Cross,
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), and other
international agencies. In the past two years (1998-99) PRM
contributed over $15 million to activities for refugee children,
including $9.5 million for UNHCR's Children-at-Risk programs that
focus on children affected by armed conflict, including child
soldiers. PRM gave more than $2 million to the Liberian Children's
Initiative, a joint UNHCR-UNICEF program to address the needs of
children and youth in Liberia following seven years of war, and $3.3
million to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) for emergency
health care, including immunizations, education and psychosocial
services, primarily to displaced Kosovars.
The Bureau of International Organization Affairs (IO), through the
International Organizations and Programs account, contributes to
several UN Development Agencies, including UNICEF. In Fiscal Year
2000, IO contributed $110 million to UNICEF's core resources, the
single largest national contribution. This was used to fund programs
for children at risk in a wide range of countries.
The U.S. has been involved in humanitarian demining since 1988, and by
the end of 2000, will have provided a cumulative total of more than
$400 million to 36 countries for various humanitarian demining
efforts, including training, mine clearance, mine awareness, and
medical assistance. The FY 2000 budget for humanitarian demining
exceeded $100 million. Much of this program assistance directly
benefits children whose lives are threatened by mines. These efforts
will continue under the President's "Demining 2010 Initiative," which
seeks a mine-safe world by 2010. In addition to programs outlined
above, the U.S. will promote partnerships with the private sector to
bring additional assets to mine action.
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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